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Moving to a larger tank



 
 
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  #1  
Old June 14th 05, 05:23 PM
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Default Moving to a larger tank

I have a 60 gallon tank and am going to "upgrade" to a 90 gallon.
Given this great opportunity to start more or less from scratch, is
there any thing that you folks would have done differently in your
current set up or is there a dream set up that I could steal ideas
from?

One thing in particular I'm wondering is if I should replace the
Flourite that I've been using as a substrate up to now or just transfer
it over and add new Flourite or another substrate to the mix.

My plans as they sit now/current equipment include an Ehiem cannister
filter, compressed CO2 injection and 2-55 watt + 1-96 watt compact
fluorescent bulbs.

Thanks!

Bob
Rancho Cucamonga, CA

  #2  
Old June 14th 05, 08:32 PM
jet
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I'd have included a cable heater in the substrate. When I do my upgrade
to a 90 (I've a 38) I'll find a way to hide all the junk (Hose, heater,
CO2 reaction chamber, pH probe, etc.) either behind a false back wall
or under the cabinet.

  #3  
Old June 14th 05, 11:02 PM
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jet wrote:
I'd have included a cable heater in the substrate. When I do my upgrade
to a 90 (I've a 38) I'll find a way to hide all the junk (Hose, heater,
CO2 reaction chamber, pH probe, etc.) either behind a false back wall
or under the cabinet.


Thanks for the feedback; I was thinking about doing that as well.

Another thing I'm considering is a chiller. It's pretty common for
temperatures to hover consistently in the 90 degree plus range in my
area and that pushes tank temperatures into the mid-80s for much of the
summer. (I don't use the A/C much, prefering to leave the windows open
to keep air flowing through the place.) Chillers seem to be getting a
bit more affordable from what I've seen, so I might do that.

Thanks!
Bob
Rancho Cucamonga, CA

  #4  
Old June 14th 05, 11:43 PM
Daniel Morrow
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wrote in message
oups.com...
I have a 60 gallon tank and am going to "upgrade" to a 90 gallon.
Given this great opportunity to start more or less from scratch, is
there any thing that you folks would have done differently in your
current set up or is there a dream set up that I could steal ideas
from?

One thing in particular I'm wondering is if I should replace the
Flourite that I've been using as a substrate up to now or just transfer
it over and add new Flourite or another substrate to the mix.

My plans as they sit now/current equipment include an Ehiem cannister
filter, compressed CO2 injection and 2-55 watt + 1-96 watt compact
fluorescent bulbs.

Thanks!

Bob
Rancho Cucamonga, CA


One of the things I would have done differently is I would have put flourite
in my tanks as a substrate exclusively. 2 of my tanks have "clown puke"
exclusively as a substrate and my other tank has washed commercially
packaged river rock. If I ever "start over" I am going to make sure that the
exclusive substrate is flourite, it wouldn't hurt and in fact would look
natural and frankly I would love to have great plants with a lot of growth
because of it.


  #5  
Old June 14th 05, 11:55 PM
Elaine T
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jet wrote:
I'd have included a cable heater in the substrate. When I do my upgrade
to a 90 (I've a 38) I'll find a way to hide all the junk (Hose, heater,
CO2 reaction chamber, pH probe, etc.) either behind a false back wall
or under the cabinet.

I'm with you on cable heaters. I wish they made them for small tanks,
although my plants are doing reasonably well without.

My dream setup includes some sort of an overflow with a sponge prefilter
for surface skimming of leaves, debris, and surface scum. I think I'd
drill the back of the tank and use a small overflow box leading to the
Eheim intake.

Flourite is expensive. I'd transfer the old and add whatever fresh is
necessary.

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Elaine T __
http://eethomp.com/fish.html '__
rec.aquaria.* FAQ http://faq.thekrib.com
  #6  
Old June 15th 05, 05:21 AM
jet
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I hear about heat living in Phoenix. I'd never build a large reef tank
without a chiller, they do much better in the low 70's. I've gone with
heat tollerant plants and fish which can handle the mid-80's the tank
runs in the Summer. Fortunatly this is easy in freshwater.

I've not used flourite, I've always been partial to laterite (cheap
from ceramic supply stores) and 2mm sand.

  #7  
Old June 16th 05, 02:33 AM
Paul A. Ergh
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How do you know that the laterite you buy from the ceramic supply store has
a high iron content? Besides the lush plants it hopefully produces :-)

"jet" wrote in message
oups.com...
I hear about heat living in Phoenix. I'd never build a large reef tank
without a chiller, they do much better in the low 70's. I've gone with
heat tollerant plants and fish which can handle the mid-80's the tank
runs in the Summer. Fortunatly this is easy in freshwater.

I've not used flourite, I've always been partial to laterite (cheap
from ceramic supply stores) and 2mm sand.



  #8  
Old June 16th 05, 02:45 PM
jet
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Well I figure it is too cheap to lie about. You can request an analysis
for it. Here is the general analysis for laterite
http://ceramic-materials.com/cermat/material/2240.html

I didn't use it this time around as I didn't want to wait for the order
and was only needing 5lbs. I instead paid more for 5lbs of granuals
from the LFC then I would have for 50 lbs of raw clay, but then I don't
have the extra clay to have kicking around the garage.

 




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